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Aeroflot Flight 411

Coordinates:56°01′39″N37°15′30″E / 56.02750°N 37.25833°E /56.02750; 37.25833
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1982 aviation accident

Aeroflot Flight 411
CCCP-86513, the aircraft involved in the accident, three months before the crash
Accident
Date6 July 1982 (1982-07-06)
SummaryLow-altitude stall
Site
Aircraft
Aircraft typeIlyushin Il-62M
OperatorAeroflot
IATA flight No.SU411
ICAO flight No.AFL411
Call signAEROFLOT 411
RegistrationСССР-86513[a]
Flight originMoscow, Soviet Union
StopoverDakar, Senegal
DestinationFreetown, Sierra Leone
Occupants90
Passengers80
Crew10
Fatalities90
Survivors0

Aeroflot Flight 411 was an international scheduled flight fromSheremetyevo Airport, Moscow toFreetown, Sierra Leone viaDakar in Senegal. Early on 6 July 1982, the four-enginedIlyushin Il-62 crashed and was destroyed by fire after two engines were shut down shortly after take-off.[1] All 90 passengers and crew on board died as a result of the accident.

Aircraft

[edit]

The accident aircraft was anIlyushin Il-62M, withregistration SSSR-86513.[a] Its first flight was in November 1980 and it had flown slightly more than 4,800 hours prior to the accident. The Il-62's four jet engines are mounted in pairs, on pylons either side of the rear fuselage.[citation needed]

Accident

[edit]

The aircraft took off from Moscow'sSheremetyevo Airport at 12:33am with 80 passengers and 10 crew on board.[2] Within seconds the engine fire warning for No. 1 engine[b] wasannunciated. The crew shut down the engine and discharged the engine fire extinguishers. Less than a minute later the engine fire warning for No. 2 engine[b] was also annunciated and the crew shut this engine down as well.[2] The crew turned the aircraft to return to Sheremetyevo Airport but after the second engine shutdown it was only at an altitude of about 160 metres (520 ft) and a speed of 320 km/h (170 kn; 200 mph). Despite the pilots' efforts to keep it airborne, the aircraft gradually lost height and airspeed until itstalled about 75 metres (246 ft) above the ground. It then crashed in a forested wetland 1.5 kilometres (0.9 mi; 0.8 nmi) east of the town ofMendeleyevo and 11.4 kilometres (7.1 mi; 6.2 nmi) northwest of Sheremetyevo Airport, less than three minutes after takeoff. A passenger from Sierra Leone survived the initial accident and subsequent fire, but died on the evening of 8 July.

Investigation

[edit]

Post-crash examination of the engines found no pre-crash damage or signs of in-flight fire – the fire warnings were false.[1] The fire warning system was almost completely destroyed by the accident and fire and the reason for the false warnings could not be determined; although there had been nine reported instances ofbleed air leaks causing spurious engine fire warnings on Il-62s between 1975 and the date of the accident, this was ruled out as a cause.[citation needed]

The investigation found that it was impossible for the aircraft to maintain altitude on two engines with its flaps set for takeoff and at its weight of 164,514 kilograms (362,691 lb), which was close to themaximum takeoff weight for an Il-62. It found no fault with the pilots' actions, who could not make aforced landing because of the dark and the urban areas on the ground below. The investigation found the pilots had followed flight manual procedures; however, there was no procedure in the flight manual to cover the situation in which they found themselves.[citation needed]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abTheaircraft registration prefix for civil aircraft registered in the Soviet Union wasSSSR. In theRussian cyrillic alphabet, the English letter "S" is written as "C" and "R" is written as "P", hence "CCCP" is "SSSR" in cyrillic.
  2. ^abEngine No. 1 and Engine No. 2 are paired on the left side of the aircraft.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abUK CAA Document CAA 429 World Airline Accident Summary
  2. ^abAccident description for CCCP-86513 at theAviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 3 January 2015.
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56°01′39″N37°15′30″E / 56.02750°N 37.25833°E /56.02750; 37.25833

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